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Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research Julia Brannen (Thomas Coram research Unit, Institute of Education) Ann Nilsen (University of Bergen)

Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

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Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research. Julia Brannen (Thomas Coram research Unit, Institute of Education) Ann Nilsen (University of Bergen). What is contextualisation?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/

biographical research

Julia Brannen (Thomas Coram research Unit, Institute of Education)

Ann Nilsen (University of Bergen)

Page 2: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

What is contextualisation?

Making sense of data in context that is in relation to other data. Typically it involves:

• Integrating qualitative and quantitative evidence

• Reviewing literature

• Referring to national trend data

• Using documentary evidence

Page 3: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

Contextualisation as a process of interpretation: using different sets/

types of evidence• Integration of different sets/ types of

evidence (qual and quant) is not straight forward and is a methodological issue

• Different types of sets/ evidence may serve a conceptual purpose e.g. to transcend levels of society - micro and macro

Page 4: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

Two main traditions in comparative cross-national research

• Case-based comparative research e.g. comparative cross-national qualitative studies

• Variable-based comparative research: e.g. European surveys

Page 5: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

A case-based comparative Xnational approach (adopted in our own study)

• Criteria for selection of cases (countries, organisations/ institutions and ‘samples’ of individuals)

• Case selection on criteria of similarity versus difference

• Emphasis is on the whole case – parts cannot be understood without reference to the whole

Page 6: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

A case-based Xnational study

• Transitions: Gender, Parenthood and the European Workplace

• EU funded under Framework 5

• www.workliferesearch.org/transitions

Page 7: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

Research design: multiple phases, methods and data

• Phase 1: Mapping of statistical trends and literature reviews in 8 countries

• Phase 2: Organisational case studies using qualitative methods (focus groups, interviews and documentation) conducted in 7 countries (2 sectors – public and private)

• Phase 3: Biographical interviews conducted with individual parents and partners –selected as matched cases across countries from Phase 2

Page 8: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

Levels of theorisation: macro, meso and micro

• Macro: national and European level (survey data; literature; public policy documents) (Phase 1)

• Meso: organisational case study (Phase 2)

• Micro: Individual biographical interviews with parents and interviews with partners (Phase 3)

Page 9: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

Analysis at different levels

Be clear in making interpretations:

What is the level - macro, meso, micro - that you are focussing on at any point in interpreting case-based research ?

Page 10: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

Aims in Phase 3: Biographical interviews with parents

• To provide an analysis of parents’ biographies and experiences in relation to different levels of context

Page 11: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

Comparative analysis of interview data

• Comparative analysis of current experiences of being a working parent (Julia to discuss)

• Comparative analysis of parents’ biographies and their transitions to parenthood (Ann to discuss)

Page 12: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

The approach to analysis and writing up

• National teams did separate analyses of own data to a common framework

• National teams wrote National Reports to a common framework provided by lead authors of cross-national report

• Lead authors of Cross-National Report did analyses of cases across countries based upon National Reports and Summaries of each individual parents interviewed by each team (all translated)

Page 13: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

Case selection in comparative analysis of parents’ current

experiences of working parenthood

• Selected matched cases in order to compare like with like

• Compromises had to be made made as comparability incomplete

Page 14: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

Comparative cross-national analysis: a multi-layered contextual approach

4 Social Care Assistants’ current experiences of working motherhood (all working in social services)

• Dahlia large city in Portugal

• Susanne in large city in Sweden

• Rosa in medium sized city in Bulgaria

• Carol in metropolis in UK

Page 15: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

Macro Level –the State

Paid Parental Leave

Affordable public childcare

Right to part time workingafter PL

Statutory time off for sick child

Portugal Low Low No No*

Sweden High High Yes Yes

Bulgaria High* High No Yes

UK Low Low* No* No

Page 16: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

Meso/ organisational level

Portugal Sweden UK Bulgaria

Contracts Mix Mix Mix Mostly permanent

Weekly Hours 35 40 36 40

Short day Yes Yes (Law) No No

Annual leave 22-27 25 24-30 20 days

Other flexible working

Some Yes but Limited No

Pay Low Moderate Low- moderate

Very low

Qualifications Low Upper secondary

Low Mix

Page 17: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

Meso level Portugal Sweden UK Bulgaria

KnowledgeAbout FF policy

Variable Variable Variable variable

Sickness time-off

Easy Easy Easy Easy

Equal opps Public sector law

Yes but Yes but None

Time off sick children

30 days a year

60 days a year (law)

6 days a year

60 days a year (law)

Page 18: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

The micro level: Comparative biographies of 2 care workers

Dália (Portugal)• left school at 13, • full-time

employment now• lived with parents

until married at 28• Two children;

first C at 30 • husband

unemployed

Susanne (Sweden)• left school at 18• 80% time now• lived

independently before marriage at 23

• 1 child at 36• husband

employed

Page 19: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

How did mothers manage?

Dália (Portugal)• Short paid P leave• Grandmother does

childcare in child’s home

• Other help from family

• Little help from husband

Susanne (Sweden)• Long shared P

Leave• Local childcare

centre• No family nearby• Husband active in

childcare• Long travel to

work

Page 20: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

How the macro and meso levels play out at the micro level in supporting these 4

mothers?

• Importance of additional contextual explanations – sources of support / lack of support

• Some methods do not necessarily reveal rival or additional explanations

Page 21: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

Individual interviews: a biographical approach

Biography: A story told in the present about events and experiences in a person’s past and her/his expectations for the future

Page 22: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

Analysis of parents’ transitions to parenthood (life lines)

Timing of key events in the life course in relation to • The cohort s/he belongs to• The overall conditions in the historical period in which a life is lived and the structural context of the society• The person’s gender and social class etc

Page 23: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

Based on analysis by national teams

Life lines provided

– Comparisons between own data and national data, for example typical timing of parenthood in the life course for age, social class

– Timings of life course transitions of individuals in relation to other transitions

– Contrasts between life lines within countries

Page 24: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

Value of a biographical/ life course approach to the national

teams • How life course transitions are interpreted

and talked about by the interviewee

• How different layers of context are made relevant in the interviews, particularly with reference to the transition to parenthood

• How some discourses are silent/silenced

• Assistance in the selection of cases

Page 25: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

Cross-national analysis of life lines (Consolidated Interview Report)

• Case selection based on material available incl. national reports and summaries

• Cases chosen with contrasting life course patterns

• Interview text

• Reports on meso level data (organisations) and macro level data – national and cross national reports from earlier phases of the study

Page 26: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

Examples of analysis ‘from the ground up’

• Drawing on all available data

• Focussing on life lines

• Analysing life lines with reference to different layers of context including the historical context

Page 27: Contextualisation in cross- national comparative qualitative/ biographical research

Example of life line: UK mother middle education

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